A new joint report by NTI and the Russian-based Center for Energy and Security Studies highlights key projects the United States and Russia can take on to innovate and build trust in the nuclear sphere.

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GSN Article

In Tehran for a one-day meeting, the top international nuclear inspector said today that Iran has raised “apprehensions” about signing the Additional Protocol to its nuclear safeguards agreement, which would allow for more intrusive monitoring of Iran’s nuclear activities (see GSN, Oct. 15).

GSN Article

After submitting a report on Iran’s nuclear activities to the International Atomic Energy Agency yesterday, an Iranian official acknowledged that the report does not identify the origin of some controversial uranium enrichment technology (see GSN, Oct. 23).

GSN Article

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the top official in Iran, has said that Tehran would not cooperate with U.N. nuclear inspectors if the nation were faced with heightened international pressure or “excessive demands,” the Associated Press reported yesterday (see GSN, Oct. 31).

GSN Article

WASHINGTON — U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham yesterday called for increased international action to prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons, saying the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty needed to be strengthened.

GSN Article

WASHINGTON — The U.N. nuclear watchdog’s governing board today responded to 18 years of covert Iranian nuclear activity by warning the country that it could pay a steep price if its recent nuclear admissions are found to be incomplete (see GSN, Nov. 25).

GSN Article

Iran said yesterday that it is still committed to signing the Additional Protocol to its nuclear safeguards agreement, but Iranian officials gave no indication of when they would formally ink the deal (see GSN, Dec. 5).

GSN Article

The International Atomic Energy Agency has called on Brazil to sign the Additional Protocol to its nuclear safeguards agreement, which would allow the agency to monitor Brazilian nuclear activity more closely, the Associated Press reported yesterday (see GSN, Dec. 29).

GSN Article

WASHINGTON — As the International Atomic Energy Agency and the United States scramble to take stock of long-concealed WMD programs in Iran and Libya, experts and diplomats here and in Vienna are saying the cases illustrate the need for changes in the international nonproliferation regime (see GSN, Dec. 31, 2003).

Speech

Recognizing that we have arrived at a dangerous tipping point in the nuclear era, Senator Nunn spoke at the Council on Foreign Relations about the path that he, George Shultz, Henry Kissinger and Bill Perry have charted for advancing the vision of a world free of nuclear weapons linked to specific steps to reduce nuclear dangers.